1 August 2025
At Easter this year we visited Shaw's Corner - the house where George Bernard Shaw lived, with his wife Charlotte, in the pretty Hertfordshire village of Ayot St Lawrence. Now a National Trust property, Shaw's Corner provides a fascinating insight into the life of the first person to win both an Oscar and a Nobel prize (both of which are on display in the house). While we were there we noticed that Shaw's Corner was going to host an open-air production of one of Shaw's plays to mark the weekend of the playwright's birthday in July. So last Friday we returned to Ayot St Lawrence to see the Rumpus Theatre Company performing 'Arms and the Man' against the backdrop of Shaw's house. I had seen 'Arms and the Man' twice before, including a great production at the Intiman Theatre in Seattle in 2002. It sits in a line of genteel but subversive comedy that stretches from Jane Austen via Oscar Wilde to Alan Ayckbourn. When it was first performed in 1894 it was billed as an 'anti-romantic comedy' but there is something romantically charming about Shaw's removal of the artifice of manners and performative chivalry. The play also deals with the realities of war and soldiering, albeit through civilised drawing-room discussion rather than actual fighting. The Rumpus production, directed and designed by John Goodrum - who also played The Man - was great fun. The strong cast managed to convey both the apparent comic caricature of the characters and the realistic sympathetic people behind the masks their positions require. And Shaw's Corner was a lovely setting on a beautiful sunny summer evening.
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